The present disclosure generally relates to an apparatus and a method for maintaining space created between vertically stacked items, and in particular, a spacing tool for maintaining space between vertically stacked large and/or heavy items during de-stacking.
Large and/or heavy items, such as loaded containers, lumber, boards, metal bars, tubes, pipes, or bundles thereof, are often vertically stacked or piled in storage or transportation to pack in a limited space as many items as allowed. To de-stack the vertically stacked or piled items, it is often necessary to create clearance or space between an item to be removed from the stack and the adjacent item therebelow to allow de-stacking equipment, such as forklift or human hands, to properly position under the item to be removed. The de-stacking equipment then lifts the item and removes it from the stack.
Therefore, in many cases, items are vertically stacked without the insertion of spacers therebetween. When de-stacking, a top item to be removed from the stack is first raised at an end or corner thereof by using machinery or human strength, and a spacer is inserted at the raised end between the item to be removed and the adjacent item therebelow. The raised end is then put down to rest on the spacer. This procedure is optionally repeated at another end or corner until space sufficient for the de-stacking equipment to use is properly created between the item to be removed and the adjacent item therebelow. The de-stacking equipment then lifts the item to be removed, and removes it from the stack. After the top item is removed, the spacers are removed from the stack so that they can be used for removing the next item.
Thus, more items may be stored in a space and/or weight limited location, and much fewer spacers are required. However, this method generally requires a person to move close to the partially raised but unbalanced item as well as the de-stacking equipment to manually place spacers, which places the personnel at the risk of injury.
Therefore, there is a need to develop a portal tool for facilitating the de-stacking of vertically stacked items.
According to one aspect of this disclosure, an apparatus for maintaining a clearance created at an interface between vertically stacked first and second loads is disclosed. The apparatus comprises a first arm having a load-attachment surface extending from a pivot, and a second arm rotatable relative to the first arm about the pivot. The second arm has opposing first and second support surfaces forming a height therebetween, and is normally biased for rotation about the pivot towards the first arm's load-attachment surface between an open position, away from the first arm's load-attachment surface, and a supporting position, towards the first arm's load-attachment surface. The first arm is attachable at a side of the first load with the pivot located at the interface, with second arm biased against the second load when the second arm is at the open position, and the second arm is rotatable to the supporting position into the clearance created at the interface for maintaining a clearance equivalent to said height between the first and second loads.
In various embodiments, the biasing mechanism may be a spring, an elastic, a rubber band, or the like. The biasing mechanism may be in the pivot, or alternatively secured to both the first and second arms.
The second arm may be a spacing block providing the height for maintaining the clearance. The spacing block may be made of wood, metal, plastic, rubber, Fibre-reinforced plastics (FRP), or the like. The cross-section of the spacing block, as viewed along an axis of the pivot, may be a rectangle, triangle, circle or other suitable shapes. The first and second support surfaces of the second arm may be of the same or different shapes and/sizes, depending on the design in various embodiments.
The first arm further comprises one or more fasteners for attaching the first arm to a side of the first or second load. According to an aspect of this disclosure, the fasteners may be nonintrusive fasteners that do not intrude into a load for attaching the first arm to a load without intruding into the load. Such nonintrusive fasteners may be magnet for attaching the first arm to a side of a ferromagnetic load, suction cups for attaching the first arm to a generally smooth side surface of a load, or a wedge, thin plate or spike for inserting in the interface between two vertically neighboring sub-loads. According to another aspect of this disclosure, the fasteners may be intrusive fasteners such as screws, spikes, sharp extrusions or the like that intrude into a load for attaching the first arm thereto.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the first and/or second loads comprises one or more sub-loads, and the apparatus further comprises a mount extending from the first arm and spaced from the pivot for securing the load-attachment surface of the first arm against the side of the load with the pivot located at the interface.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the second load is on top of the first load. According to yet another aspect of this disclosure, the first load is on top of the second load.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, a method for maintaining a clearance created at an interface between vertically stacked first and second loads is disclosed, the method comprising:
providing a first spacing tool having a first arm and a second arm coupled at a pivot for rotation therebetween;
locating the pivot of the first spacing tool at the interface;
attaching the first arm of the first spacing tool at a side of the first load, the second arm of the first spacing tool cocked to an open position biased towards the second load;
separating the first and second loads to form a clearance at least about the location of the first spacing tool;
urging the second arm of the first spacing tool to a supporting position into the clearance; and
reducing the clearance until the upper of the first and second loads is supported upon the second arm of the first spacing tool for maintaining the clearance between the first and second loads.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the method further comprises: cocking the second arm of the first spacing tool to an open position; attaching the first arm of the first spacing tool to the lower load with the pivot of the first spacing tool located at the interface and the second arm of the first spacing tool biased against the upper load; and lifting the upper load until the second arm of the first spacing tool rotates to the supporting position.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the method further comprises: cocking the second arm of the first spacing tool to an open position; attaching the first arm of the first spacing tool to the upper load with the pivot of the first spacing tool located at the interface and the second arm of the first spacing tool biased against the lower load; and lifting the upper load and attached first spacing tool until the second arm of the first spacing tool rotates into the clearance.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the method further comprises: attaching the first arm of the first spacing tool at a side of the first load with fasteners.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the method further comprises: attaching the first arm of the first spacing tool at a side of the first load with magnets.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the attaching of the first arm is temporary. The de-stacking tool may be removed after the upper load is removed from the stack.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the method further comprises:
providing a second spacing tool having a first arm and a second arm coupled at a pivot for rotation therebetween;
locating the pivot of the second spacing tool at the interface;
attaching the first arm of the second spacing tool at a side of one of the first and second loads, the second arm of the second spacing tool cocked to an open position biased towards the other of the first and second loads;
separating the first and second loads to form a clearance at least about the location of the second spacing tool;
urging the second arm of the second spacing tool to a supporting position into the clearance; and
reducing the clearance until the upper of the first and second loads is supported upon the second arm of the second spacing tool for maintaining the clearance between the first and second loads.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the first arm of the second spacing tool is attached to a side of one of the first and second loads after the first and second loads have been separated to form a clearance at least about the location of the first spacing tool.
According to another aspect of this disclosure, the first arm of the second spacing tool is attached to a side of one of the first and second loads before the first and second loads have been separated to form a clearance at least about the location of the first spacing tool, and the first and second loads are separated to form a clearance at least about the locations of both the first and the second spacing tools.
This disclosure discloses a portable spacing tool as a de-stacking aid for maintaining clearance created between vertically stacked loads. Examples of such stacked loads include a plurality of stacked planer rig mats, sheets and beams. Herein, a “load” refers to one item or a plurality of vertically stacked sub-loads in a stack that may be lifted or removed therefrom as a group. In the following the load to be lifted or removed from the stack is denoted as the upper load, and the load below the upper load is denoted as the lower load.
One may first attach the spacing tool at a side of the upper load or the lower load, and then separate the loads to create sufficient clearance between the upper load and the lower load. When the clearance is reduced again, such as by lowering the upper load, the spacing tool automatically maintains that clearance without having to manually insert a block, spacer or dunnage therebetween. Thereafter, one can readily use de-stacking equipment to lift and remove the upper load from the stack.
Generally, the spacing tool is a hinged apparatus having a spacing arm and an attachment arm pivotably coupled at adjacent ends via a pivot. The attachment arm comprises one or more fasteners for attaching the attachment arm at a side of a load with the pivot located at an interface between the upper and lower loads. The spacing arm is rotatable about the pivot and is initially cocked in an open position, which allows the attachment arm to be attached to a load. The spacing arm is rotatable to a support position. When the spacing arm is rotated into a clearance created between the upper and lower loads, the spacing arm supports and maintains a clearance between the two loads. A biasing mechanism urges the spacing arm into the support position.
One may configure a spacing arm to the open position by overcoming the biasing force of the pivot, cocking the spacing arm, orienting the spacing tool in a vertical orientation and attaching the attachment arm at a side of a load such as the lower load. The spacing arm then rests against the other of the loads, such as the upper load, until the sufficient clearance is created for the spacing arm to rotate thereinto. The biasing mechanism urges the spacing arm to rotate to the support position and reside between the upper and lower loads. When the lifted upper load is lowered onto on the spacing arm, the spacing tool maintains a clearance by supporting the upper load upon the spacing arm and transferring weight imposed by the upper load, through the spacing arm, to the lower load. One or more spacing tools are used as necessary to space the upper load from the lower load.
With reference to
In this embodiment, the pivot 102 is a spring hinge having a spacing leaf 108 and an attachment leaf 114, the biasing mechanism 120 comprising a spring in the hinge. The spacing arm 104 is formed by the spacing leaf 108. For ease and flexibility of setting the clearance height provided by the tool 100, the spacing arm 104 further comprises a spacing block 110 that is secured to the spacing leaf 108 using suitable fasteners 112 such as screws, nails, glue, barbs, nuts and bolts, or the like.
The attachment arm 106 is formed by the attachment leaf 114 and, if of insufficient extent to permit ready attachment, is further provided with an attachment block 116 that is mounted to the attachment leaf 114 using suitable fasteners 118 such as screws, nails, glue, barbs, nuts and bolts, or the like.
The spacing block 110 is a cubic block having a mounting surface 126 for mounting to the spacing leaf 108, a first support surface 124 for engaging one of the upper or lower load, and a second support surface 122 for engaging the other of the lower or upper load. Being perpendicular to the mounting surface 126, the first and second support surfaces 124, 122 are generally parallel and spaced apart a distance H for maintaining a clearance suitable for access by conventional de-stacking equipment.
As will be described in more detail later, the initial positioning and attachment of the attachment arm 106 dictates which of the first and second support surfaces 124 and 122 ultimately engage which of the upper or lower loads in the support position.
The spacing block 110 is made of a material with at least a sufficient compressive strength to support the anticipated loads. Such block material can be wood, metal, plastics such as epoxy resins, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE), Fibre-reinforced plastic (FRP), or the like.
The attachment block 116 is a structure having a mounting surface 128 for mounting to the attachment leaf 114 and a load-attachment surface 130 on the opposite side thereof for facing or contacting a surface of the load when the attachment block 116 is attached thereto. The attachment block 116 comprises one or more suitable fasteners for attaching the attachment block 116 to a load. Those skilled in the art appreciate that the one or more suitable fasteners are determined by the designed use of the spacing tool 100, and shall match the properties of the load. For example, in this embodiment, the spacing tool 100 is used for creating clearance between vertically stacked loads having steel or other ferromagnetic sides, and thus the attachment block 116 can be a magnetic metal plate providing a magnetic field for attaching the spacing tool 100 to a steel load. Loads having wood or other similar periphery or sides are amenable to attachment using other fasteners, which are described in more detail later.
As better illustrated in
The spacing arm 104 is initially manipulated or cocked to rotate from the support position, against the bias of the pivot 102, to an open position to enable attaching of the attachment arm 106 to the load with the pivot 102 aligned with the intended clearance.
As shown in
As shown in
In the support position, at least a substantial portion of the spacing block 110 has rotated to the attachment side 132 and into the clearance 144. The first support surface 124 engages the lower load 138 and the second support surface 122 engages the upper load 136, supporting the upper load 136 and maintaining the required clearance equivalent to height H for aiding in de-stacking and removing the upper load 136 from the stack.
The dimensions of the spacing block 110 determine the height H of the clearance and the stability of supporting the load on top thereof. For the ease of description, in the following, the height H, depth D and width W of the spacing block 110 are defined as those when the spacing arm 104 is rotated to the support position. Referring back to
The height H of the spacing block 110, between the first and second support surfaces 124 and 122 determines the clearance to be maintained between two adjacent loads, which is of a dimension sufficient for access by de-stacking equipment. The width W of the spacing block 110 is one aspect of load support stability along the horizontal direction of the axis of the pivot 102, having a width sufficient for providing stable load support.
Referring again to
With the method 200, a person first creates a clearance between an upper load and a lower load, being the load immediately below the upper load, and uses a spacing tool 100 to maintain the clearance (step 204). Then, the person determines if clearance at all necessary locations has been created (step 206). Such determination depends on the actual use scenario. For example, if the upper load is an extended member, such as a construction stud that has a width comparable to the dimension of the spacing tool 100, only one or perhaps two spacing tools 100 may be required, each at a location near an end of the upper load. If the upper load has a large planer surface, such as a sheet or mat having width much wider than the dimension of the spacing tool 100, both end-to-end and side-to-side spacing tools 100, for example four spacing tools 100, may be required, each at a location near a corner of the upper load. As another example, if the de-stacking equipment is able to exploit uneven clearance to remove the upper load, one spacing tool 100 located near one end of the upper load may be sufficient.
If at step 206, it is determined that clearance has not been created at all necessary locations, the process goes back to step 204 to use another spacing tool 100 to create clearance at the next location. If at step 206, it is determined that clearance at all necessary locations has been created, de-stacking equipment is then used to exploit the created clearance and remove the upper load from the stack.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The mechanical force 320 then lowers the first end 308 of the upper load 136. As the spacing arm 104 is now at the support position, the spacing block 110 blocks the vertical moving path 324 of the upper load 136. As shown in
For separating elongated upper and lower loads along their extent, similarly, as shown in
Persons skilled in the art appreciate that, alternatively, a spacing tool may be attached to an end surface of an upper load for creating clearance, as illustrated in
As described above, a load may consist of a plurality of items as a group.
Other embodiments are also readily available.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The mechanical force 320 then lowers the end of the upper load 136, as indicated by the arrow 454. As the spacing tool 100 is attached on the upper load 136, it also moves down. As shown in
In above embodiments, multiple spacing tools are used sequentially, wherein a next spacing tool 100′ is attached to a load after a previous tool 100 has been used to create and maintain a clearance. In an alternative embodiment, when multiple spacing tools 100 are needed, the multiple spacing tools 100 are configured to the open position and are all attached to appropriate locations of a load, and then the upper load is lifted to a height sufficient for all of the multiple spacing tools 100 to automatically configure to the support position. The upper load is then lower to rest upon the multiple spacing tools 100.
Those skilled in the art appreciate that, when multiple spacing tools 100 are used, the multiple spacing tools 100 may all be attached to the same load, being either the upper or the lower load as described above, or alternatively, some of the multiple spacing tools 100 may be attached to the upper load and other spacing tools 100 be attached to the lower load.
In an alternative embodiment, multiple groups of spacing tools, each comprising at least one spacing tool 100, are used. An operator first uses a group of spacing tools 100 to create and maintain clearance at some locations, and then uses another group of spacing tools 100 to create and maintain another clearance at other locations, and so on. When a group of spacing tools are used, all spacing tools of the group may be attached to the same load, being either the upper or the lower load, or alternatively, some spacing tools 100 in the group may be attached to the upper load and other spacing tools 100 in the group be attached to the lower load.
Although in above embodiments, the attachment block 116 is a magnetic plate used as a fastener for attaching the attachment arm to a ferromagnetic portion of a load, other attachment blocks and fasteners are also readily available. Generally, the fasteners for attaching the attachment arm to a side of a load may be nonintrusive fasteners for attaching the attachment arm to a load without intruding into the load, or intrusive fasteners that penetrate the load to attach the attachment arm thereto. Examples of nonintrusive fasteners include magnet for attaching the first arm to a side of a ferromagnetic load, suction cups for attaching the first arm to a generally smooth side surface of a load, or a wedge, thin plate or spike for inserting in the interface between two vertically neighboring sub-loads. Examples of intrusive fasteners include screws, spikes, sharp extrusions or the like that intrude into a load for attaching the first arm thereto. The particular choice of fasteners depends on the designed use of the spacing tool 100, and may vary in different embodiments. The following shows some examples.
As shown in
In above embodiments, the attachment leaf 114 is mounted to the attachment block 116 such that a surface of the attachment block 116 is in contact with a load when the spacing tool 100 is attached thereto. As shown in
Although in above embodiment, the attachment arm 106 is formed by the attachment leaf 114 and the attachment block 116, in another embodiment, the attachment arm 106 is an integrated component pivotably couple to the spacing arm 104 via the pivot 102.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In another embodiment, the attachment block 116 comprises a coarse surface as a nonintrusive fastener that uses friction as the attachment mechanism for attaching the spacing tool 100 to a load. The coarse surface may be formed by the attachment block 116, or may be formed by a suitable material such as felt, mounted on the respective load-attachment surface 130 of the attachment block 112. Similarly, opposing hook and loop type fasteners could be used. Fasteners such as suction cups that use vacuum for attaching the attachment arm to a generally smooth surface of a load may be used.
In another embodiment, the spacing tool 100 comprises a replaceable attachment block 116. In this embodiment, various types of attachment blocks as described above may be provided as available parts such that one may select and install a suitable attachment block onto the spacing tool 100 based on the nature of the load.
In above embodiments, the spacing leaf 108 is mounted to the spacing block 110 such that, at the support position, the spacing leaf 108 is generally parallel to the load-attachment surface 130. However, those skilled in the art appreciate that the spacing leaf 108 may alternatively be mounted to other locations of the spacing block 110. For example, as shown in
In above embodiments, the spacing leaf 108 is mounted to a surface of the spacing block 110. In an alternative embodiment as shown in
In above embodiments, the spacing block 110 is a cube. However, the spacing block 110 may alternatively be of other suitable shapes. For example, the cross-section of the spacing block, as viewed along an axis of the pivot, may be a rectangle, triangle, circle, or other suitable shapes. The first and second support surfaces 124 and 122 of the spacing block 110 may be of the same or different shapes and/sizes, depending on the design in various embodiments.
In above embodiments, the spacing block 110 is mounted to the spacing arm 104. However, in an alternative embodiment, the spacing block 110 may be an integrated part of the spacing arm 104 manufactured via a suitable means such as welding, molding, or the like, such that a portion of the spacing arm 104 may be considered as the spacing block 110.
Although in above embodiments, the biasing mechanism 120 is mounted in the pivot 102, those skilled in the art appreciate that the biasing mechanism 120 may alternatively mounted in other locations.
Those skilled in the art appreciate that other biasing mechanisms, such as elastics, rubber bands, or the like, are also readily available in alternative embodiments.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61756747 | Jan 2013 | US |